The Jerusalem Post

Far-right German lawmaker ousted as committee head over antisemiti­sm

- • By MADELINE CHAMBERS

BERLIN (Reuters) – German lawmakers on Wednesday ousted a member of the farright opposition Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) as head of a parliament­ary committee, after he made comments widely condemned as antisemiti­c.

The unpreceden­ted move highlights growing concern about radicalism in the ranks of the AfD, which swept into the federal parliament for the first time in the 2017 election amid public anger over Chancellor Angela Merkel’s open-door migrant policy.

The AfD’s Stephan Brandner was voted out as head of the Bundestag lower house of parliament’s legal affairs committee, as other parties joined forces against him.

“The de-selection of Brandner is a clear signal against incitement and hate – we are finally returning dignity to the office,” said German Conservati­ve Party member Jan-Marco Luczak.

Brandner was castigated by politician­s from other parties for tweeting that popular singer Udo Lindenberg got a “Judas Reward” when he was awarded a federal medal.

The term, referring to the disciple who betrayed Jesus, was widely interprete­d as being antisemiti­c, and, his critics said, showed he is unfit to lead the committee. The AfD is often criticized for its use of Nazi-era terms such as “volksverra­eter,” or “traitor of the people.”

Many commentato­rs believe that Brandner targeted Lindenberg because he has criticized the AfD, especially Bjoern Hoecke, the AfD leader in the eastern state of Thuringia, who leads a radical wing within the party.

Brandner had also retweeted a post after an attack on a synagogue in Halle last month in which two people were killed, asking why politician­s were “hanging around” mosques and synagogues with candles when the victims had been Germans.

In a country that fiercely defends freedom of speech, this is the first time in German postwar history that a committee chairman has been voted out, causing Brandner to cast himself as a victim of other maneuverin­gs.

“Whatever we do, the other parties just want to kick the AfD in the shins,” he said after being ousted.

AfD coleader Alexander Gauland condemned the ousting of Brandner.

“I don’t know where the scandal is .... This is an affront to democracy,” said Gauland, who has described the Nazi era as “just bird shit in 1,000 years of successful German history.”

The AfD is now the third-largest party in the Bundestag lower house and is polling at around 14%. It is strongest in the former Communist East, where support for the party surged in three regional elections this autumn. parties’

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